Feeling the Heat2.

NULL

Alright guys help me out for a friend.
He is using this stove and is getting pretty short burn times. I asked about NS vs EW burns and he is getting shorter burns with EW. What can anyone say that I can send to him for a bit of help. What have you found that works. I'm talking about burn controls as well as wood.
His stove is getting to about 600 in about 1 hour, but is down to about 200 4 hours after. Is this usual?
Thanks for any help.
Chad

Member2.

NULL

Good, seasoned hardwood I presume? If I pack my Quad 4300 on a good bed of coals and reduce the air to minimum, I only have to throw on some smaller spilts in the morning to get it going again. I'm using 2 year old maple and beech: nice...

My external stovepipe temp (single wall, 14 inches up from stove) at minimum air usually runs about 250.

Feeling the Heat2.

NULL

I was more curious about how to go about longer burn times and what you do. My Oslo will run 8 hours and have coals for a relight his is out.
Wood is seasoned fine, gets to temp fine, just short burn times.
Thanks for the replies fellas.
Chad

Member2.

NULL

If I am correctly understanding one of the themes of this forum...it's all about the wood being used and the stove's draft....

That being said, all I do is pack the stove full with maple and beech, and immediately turn down all air as far as possible: no big technique to it. There is no doubt that your friend has both air controls al the way closed....right?

Mooderator2.

NULL

Staff Member

It could be the size of the splits he is using or the wood is extremely dry or he is mixing in softwood or lumber scraps. 10 small splits will ignite and burn up faster than 3 big ones.

Another possibility could be that he has very strong draft and needs to cut it down. Can you describe the wood he is burning and the height of the flue off the stove?

PE Alderlea T6 - the gentle giant and a Jotul 602, the little stove that could“Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on, or by imbeciles who really mean it.” - Mark Twain -
"A poor worker always blames his tools." - Dad